Dramatic Footage Shows Buffalo Escaping Lion Attack After Herd Swoops In To Save Her
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Incredible footage has emerged that captures a buffalo’s dramatic escape from a pride of hungry lions — an escape made possible thanks to the actions of her herd.
WARNING: Graphic Content Below
The video, captured recently on the sprawling grounds of Kruger National Park in South Africa, shows a female buffalo surrounded by four lionesses. After a brief struggle to remain upright, the buffalo is eventually brought to the ground and subdued.
But just when it seems all hope of survival has been lost, something quite remarkable happens; four other buffalo — well out of harm’s way — return to confront the lions, driving them off the female with a single charge.
Similar scenes between buffalo and lions have been captured on film only a handful of times, but this sort of behavior is not entirely uncommon, says Wayne M. Getz, Ph.D., a wildlife behaviorist at the University of California, Berkeley. In fact, Getz, who conducts research on the animals at Kruger National Park, told The Dodo he’s seen buffalo come to the rescue in this manner on several occasions.
“The buffalo being attacked in the video is a female, and those driving the lions away are young males. They will often intervene when there’s a calf or younger female involved,” says Getz. “While some people may call this behavior ‘altruism,’ that term should be used in quotes here. By protecting this female from predation, they are, in effect, helping to secure the reproductive future of the herd.”
African buffalo, with their broad, sharpened horns, are uniquely equipped to come to the aid of their fallen herd members. And fortunately for the female under attack, they stepped in without a moment to spare.
“Lionesses, like the four seen in the video, are no match for a group of male buffalo, which is why they seem so wary. You can see them scatter after the initial blow,” says Getz. “The males arrived just in time, as you can see, since the female runs off prior to being mortally wounded.”
Kruger National Park is the setting for perhaps the most famous footage of a buffalo herd defending their kind from attack. This video, titled “Battle at Kruger,” is among the most-viewed nature videos on YouTube —it's been watched more than 75 million times since it was uploaded to the site in 2007.
WARNING: Graphic Content Below
The video, captured recently on the sprawling grounds of Kruger National Park in South Africa, shows a female buffalo surrounded by four lionesses. After a brief struggle to remain upright, the buffalo is eventually brought to the ground and subdued.
But just when it seems all hope of survival has been lost, something quite remarkable happens; four other buffalo — well out of harm’s way — return to confront the lions, driving them off the female with a single charge.
Similar scenes between buffalo and lions have been captured on film only a handful of times, but this sort of behavior is not entirely uncommon, says Wayne M. Getz, Ph.D., a wildlife behaviorist at the University of California, Berkeley. In fact, Getz, who conducts research on the animals at Kruger National Park, told The Dodo he’s seen buffalo come to the rescue in this manner on several occasions.
“The buffalo being attacked in the video is a female, and those driving the lions away are young males. They will often intervene when there’s a calf or younger female involved,” says Getz. “While some people may call this behavior ‘altruism,’ that term should be used in quotes here. By protecting this female from predation, they are, in effect, helping to secure the reproductive future of the herd.”
African buffalo, with their broad, sharpened horns, are uniquely equipped to come to the aid of their fallen herd members. And fortunately for the female under attack, they stepped in without a moment to spare.
“Lionesses, like the four seen in the video, are no match for a group of male buffalo, which is why they seem so wary. You can see them scatter after the initial blow,” says Getz. “The males arrived just in time, as you can see, since the female runs off prior to being mortally wounded.”
Kruger National Park is the setting for perhaps the most famous footage of a buffalo herd defending their kind from attack. This video, titled “Battle at Kruger,” is among the most-viewed nature videos on YouTube —it's been watched more than 75 million times since it was uploaded to the site in 2007.
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